Adoption is the process where a person applies in court to be considered as the parent of a child.
Any child (a person younger than 18 years of age) may be adopted, where:
- s/he is an orphan and there are no legal guardians or caregivers willing to adopt him/her;
- his/her parents or legal guardians cannot be established;
- s/he was abandoned, for example, the child had no contact with his/her parents or legal guardians for at least three months;
- s/he was abused or neglected by his/her parents, legal guardians or caregivers; or
- s/he needs a permanent home.
Who can apply to adopt a child?
- The following persons, older than 18 years of age, can adopt a child:
- spouses, partners in a life-partnership (including same-sex partners), or other persons sharing and forming a permanent home;
- a widower, widow, unmarried, or divorced person;
- a person married to the parent of the child, for example, a stepparent; or
- the father of a child born out of wedlock.
- A person cannot be prevented from adopting a child due to his/her financial status.
- A person wanting to adopt a child must be:
- fit and proper to be entrusted with full parental rights and responsibilities;
- willing and able to exercise and maintain those rights and responsibilities; and
be properly assessed by an adoption social worker.
Who must give consent to an adoption?
- Each parent of the child (whether married to each other or not) and/or every legal guardian must give his/her consent.
- If the child is older than 10 years of age, s/he must also give consent.
- If the child is younger than 10 years of age, his/her consent will only be required if s/he has the maturity and understanding to consent to the adoption.
- Consent must be reduced to writing, signed by the person giving the consent and verified by the Children’s Court.
Can consent be withdrawn?
- Yes, a person who gave consent to an adoption has up to 60 days after the consent has been given to withdraw his/her consent.
- A Children’s Court must not allow the adoption to be finalised before the period of 60 days has expired.
When is consent not required?
Consent is not required if the parents or legal guardians:
- has a mental illness;
- abandoned the child and cannot be tracked down;
- abused or neglected the child, or allowed the child to be abused or neglected;
- failed to fulfill their parental rights and responsibilities towards the child for 12 months;
- failed to respond to the notice of the proposed adoption within 30 days of receiving it;
- is the father of the child, but did not marry the child’s mother and did not acknowledge that he is the father of the child;
- is the father of the child who was conceived from an incestuous relationship between his/her parents; and
- is the father of the child and the court found that the child was conceived as a result of the rape of his/her mother.